Anti-idiotypic Antibody Vaccine for Type B Viral Hepatitis in Chimpanzees

Ronald C. Kennedy(Texas Biomedical Research Institute), Jörg W. Eichberg(Texas Biomedical Research Institute), Ronald E. Lanford(Texas Biomedical Research Institute), Gordon R. Dreesman(Texas Biomedical Research Institute)
Science
April 11, 1986
Cited by 153

Abstract

Anti-idiotypic antibodies (anti-Id) that contain an internal image component that mimics the surface antigen of hepatitis B virus (HBsAg) were used to immunize chimpanzees. Four injections of the rabbit anti-Id preparation elicited an antibody response to HBsAg (anti-HBs). The antibody specificity appeared to be against the anti-Id, since the anti-Id immunogen was shown to bind the chimpanzee anti-HBs. Two chimpanzees immunized with the anti-Id, along with two control animals that were either untreated or received a nonimmune rabbit immunoglobulin G preparation, were challenged with infectious hepatitis B virus. Both control chimpanzees developed clinical and serological characteristics consistent with an active hepatitis B virus infection, whereas the two anti-Id treated chimpanzees were protected from infection. Since chimpanzees provide a relevant model of a human response to hepatitis B virus immunization and infection, these results indicate that anti-Id preparations such as that described here might be candidates for vaccines against human diseases.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis